<cracks knuckles>
Hoo boy. Here comes the sledgehammer. Buy y'all asked for it.
I think we still would would have had Shatner, since it was Hunter who decided to leave, not the network.
If Roddenberry had full creative control then either NBC would have:
- Approved the first pilot for fall 1965 or mid-season 1966, and Shatner's availability may not have allowed him to do it. He ended up doing For the People as a midseason replacement Jan 1966.
- Not picked up the show because of the problems we know they had with the first pilot.
If NBC somehow still asked for a second pilot it's up in the air how much of the cast from the first pilot would have carried over anyway because their contracts didn't cover a second pilot, and either they or Gene might've reconsidered.
It seems like instead of Wrath of Khan there likely would have been the time travel/meet JFK movie,
This presumes the Roddenberry-controlled show would have been successful enough to have lasted long enough to be stripped for syndication and the same fandom would have resulted. That's not a given.
He was a great ideas man, but he only had, say, 3 good ideas out of 5. He needed other creatives around him to tell he when he'd conceived a duffer.
I've read a lot of his memos to the writers. I don't agree with that assessment at all. The way he
wanted to do the show was to write story springboards that freelance writers would develop into scripts, or have them bring ideas in. He really didn't want to be writing scripts. He wanted to sell other shows.
Having read Gene's script for Star Trek II, or as it's better known, "The God Thing," the franchise would be worse off if we got the full, unfiltered Roddenberry.
Possibly, but Roddenberry of 1975 was a decade removed from Roddenberry of 1965–66, so it's difficult to judge his decade-earlier self based on that. Now his 1968
Tarzan script...
Spock would have been red-skinned and would have had some kind of metal plate embedded in his body through which he needed to periodically recharge.
Wrong. The Spock absorbs-energy thing is in a script we have and there's no metal plate, and it's more complicated than that. We're gonna cover this in Fact Trek sometime.
And, seriously, MeTV as a source?
It is Coon who created or wrote:
Nope. Roddenberry invented it in his 2nd pilot script for "The Omega Glory", where it was already IDed as the number one order. Coon just named it.
How much of the sexism of TOS was due to Roddenberry?
Reading the BTS memos, even Justman wrote sexist comments.
Lucille Ball was had kept it alive in 1966 after the board wanted to give up on it, even after NBC had given the green light.
[...]
She did trust Robert Justman and Herbert Solow.
We covered Lucy's supposed involvement with Star Trek's fate here (
link) and here (
link), and it's not as cut and dried as some would have you believe.
And Lucy trusted Solow. I doubt she knew Justman from Adam, since he was just an A.D. during the pilots.